Baltimore Sun Sunday

Saban, Smart put defenses first in quests for crown

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CHAMPIONSH­IP, said Chris Brown, author of “The Essential Smart Football” and “The Art of Smart Football.”

Saban was defensive coordinato­r with the Cleveland Browns for Bill Belichick from 1991-94, and the two share similar philosophi­es.

The basics are this: 3-4 alignments that start with stout defensive linemen, who occupy blockers and can clog multiple gaps up front. This year’s Alabama team has 308-pound Da’Ron Payne at nose guard. Georgia has 305-pound nose John Atkins.

“I think you have to be good up the middle,” Alabama defensive coordinato­r Jeremy Pruitt said. “Big guys up front.”

As college offenses have become more spread out, Saban and Smart and Georgia defensive coordinato­r Mel Tucker, who worked for Saban at LSU and Alabama, have adjusted. When facing offenses that line up with three or more wide receivers, the defense shifts to four-man fronts and usually five defensive backs. And with so many teams playing offense up-tempo these days, a key is having versatile players who can be cross-trained at multiple positions. The personnel does not have to change if the defense changes.

Tight, press coverage is typical on the outside and a concept called pattern matching is often used. Think of it as football’s version of basketball’s matchup zone.

“They’re playing zone until someone comes into their space and then they play man,” SEC Network analyst and former Auburn offensive lineman Cole Cubelic said. Defenders determine which receiver they are taking by reading the routes.

“They’re going to challenge receivers and not give up easy stuff, and that comes from (Saban’s) time with Belichick, where he learned a lot of sophistica­ted defensive coverage and concepts,” Brown said. “It’s not what Saban calls country zones, where you just drop to a spot and watch the quarterbac­k’s eyes.”

Add in those hard to move defensive linemen allowing agile linebacker­s to fill holes and the basic offense schemes — short throws and between the tackle runs — rarely are productive against Saban’s defenses.

“They do a great job of denying easy offense,” said Miami’s Manny Diaz, regarded as one of the top defensive coordinato­rs in the country.

Brown said Saban’s defensive playbook when Saban coached the Miami Dolphins was famously 1,400 pages.

“The menu is huge. All the checks and adjustment­s are huge,” said Temple coach Geoff Collins, who spent a season working for Saban at Alabama before becoming defensive coordinato­r at Mississipp­i State and Florida. “But what they’ll apply to each game they won’t pull from the entire playbook. They just do a good job of knowing what look they’re giving (an offense) and having a compliment off of that look.”

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